Author:  Erik Larson
Viewed: 50 - Published at: 8 years ago

But old tensions and enmities persisted. Britain's King George V loathed his cousin Kaiser Wilhelm II, Germany's supreme ruler; and Wilhelm, in turn, envied Britain's expansive collection of colonies and its command of the seas, so much so that in 1900 Germany began a campaign to build warships in enough quantity and of large enough scale to take on the British navy. This in turn drove Britain to begin an extensive modernization of its own navy, for which it created a new class of warship, the Dreadnought, which carried guns of a size and power never before deployed at sea. Armies swelled in size as well. To keep pace with each other, France and Germany introduced conscription. Nationalist fervor was on the rise. Austria-Hungary and Serbia shared a simmering mutual resentment. The Serbs nurtured pan-Slavic ambitions that threatened the skein of territories and ethnicities that made up the Austro-Hungarian empire {typically referred to simply as Austria}. These included such restive lands as Herzegovina, Bosnia, and Croatia. As one historian put it, "Europe had too many frontiers, too many-and too well-remembered-histories, too many soldiers for safety.

( Erik Larson )
[ Dead Wake: The Last Crossing ]
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